No one discovered it. I'm not sure about the spoken language, but Kanji (which is the pictorial form of Japanese, not the phonetic) was brought over from China by Chinese explorers or merchants. Very few, if any, of the pronunciations for these characters were adopted by the Japanese people. Nobody ever discovers a language, but they learn it.
No one. Languages are not discovered they develop or are invented.
The Hundreds of different Indian languages were not discovered. They evolved naturally among the people that spoke them.
William Jones (1786) was credited with the discovery but it was noted that there were a few others who noted the links between the languages.
William Jones (1786) was credited with the discovery but it was noted that there were a few others who noted the links between the languages
No one discovered it, it wasn't found hidden deep within an Aztec tomb, and then decoded - it was invented. By James Gosling, I think.
Computer languages were not discovered, as no computers used them before people used them. Computer languages are artificial languages invented by people to simplify control of computers.As to the inventors of the earliest computer languages they were:John Backus of IBM: FORTRAN.Grace Hopper of UNIVAC: A-0, FLOW-MATIC, COBOL.Both did their original compiler development work ca. 1954.
The Rosetta Stone is a slab that depicts three different ancient languages. It was discovered in Egypt in 1799.
The Brahmi script was discovered in 1838 by British archaeologist James Prinsep. He deciphered the inscriptions found on ancient Indian edicts, particularly those of Emperor Ashoka, which played a crucial role in understanding early Indian history and languages. Prinsep's work laid the foundation for the study of ancient Indian scripts and languages.
This designation is considered obsolete. At one time, Hamitic languages were a theoretic group of non-semitic afro-asiatic languages. It turned out that no languages fell into this family. No Hamitic culture has ever been discovered.
We don't know. Simply because the first languages were never written down and were spoken-only languages, before mankind discovered the ability to write.The oldest written text discovered so far dates back 5,000 years, and is written in Sumerian. The language of Ancient Sumer.The second oldest (we think) is Sanskrit.However, they may not be factually correct because, as stated above, not all languages were written down.
English as a language developed over centuries through the fusion of various languages spoken by Germanic tribes in early medieval England. It was not discovered at a specific time but evolved from the combination of Old English rooted in Germanic languages and influences from Latin, Norse, and French. The earliest forms of English can be traced back to around the 5th century.
Because, until forging of iron was discovered, the only iron was what came from meteorite or "falling stars."